Three weeks remain in what has been a remarkable regular season for Ryan Fitzpatrick, three games to get the Jets into the playoffs, to complete what has been a career season for this journeyman quarterback, but also enough time to prove to Gang Green they should commit to him for the future, if he hasn’t made enough of a case already.

“I’d love to be back,” he said with a smile.

Jets coach Todd Bowles has said publicly he wants Fitzpatrick back. The quarterback is 33, but perhaps he has turned a corner in his 10th NFL season.

“I’ll make my opinion known,” Bowles said, when asked what input he will have about personnel decisions when the season is over.

Of course, there are still three games left, and, as Fitzpatrick knows, the future is uncertain. He’s worried about the Cowboys and then the Patriots, not next year.

After all, he wasn’t sure he would get another crack at being an NFL starting quarterback in the first place. Traded twice and released three times, he came to the Jets with no expectations.

Even when Bowles proclaimed him the starter after IK Enemkpali broke Geno Smith’s jaw in an embarrassing locker-room fight early in training camp, Fitzpatrick didn’t get ahead of himself.

Fitzpatrick, who will be a free agent after the season, knows how quickly things can change in the league. A starting quarterback one day, unemployed the next.

“I felt like it was an opportunity for me to play, which in having been cut and having been released and traded and all the different things that I’ve been through in my career, you never know when opportunities are going to come,” he said after practice Tuesday. “Just try to take advantage of that the best I can.”

These days, in the midst of a dream season, within four touchdowns of Vinny Testaverde’s single-season franchise mark of 29, Fitzpatrick is asked about how far he has come, why he is playing at such a high level, what it would mean to finally reach the playoffs.

He’s still treating each day like it’s training camp, like he has a job to win. He’s as prone to make bold declarations as he is to acknowledge his gaudy statistics.

“It’s great, but I’m focused at the task at hand,” he said. “Things change so quickly in the NFL.”

He’s a perfect case study, the journeyman who played for six teams in 10 seasons, enjoying one of the best seasons any Jets signal-caller has ever had. He’s thrown a career-high 25 touchdowns compared to just 11 interceptions — nine touchdowns and no interceptions during the Jets’ current three-game winning streak — and has run for 232 yards, on pace to set a personal best, leading the Jets to a four-win improvement with three games to go.

“He’s had success in this league — maybe not this consistent, but he’s had success — and he’s at peace with himself,” Bowles said. “I think he’s doing things a lot better. I think he’s a lot calmer. I think he’s not trying to win games by himself, mainly. Obviously, he has talent around him to do some of those things, but most quarterbacks do.

“He’s very intelligent. He can make you feel at home and he’s a funny guy. He can make you feel like you want to play hard for him. He just has that personality that everybody gravitates towards.”

With Fitzpatrick leading the way, the Jets are one of the top red-zone offenses in the league, scoring touchdowns 68.1 percent of the time, behind only the Lions and Patriots, after doing so at just a 36.1 percent rate last year. While most have pointed to the talent Fitzpatrick has around him, two high-level receivers in Brandon Marshall and Eric Decker, a pair of quality running backs in Chris Ivory and Bilal Powell, and a solid offensive line, Bowles looks at it a little differently.

“He helps them as well,” the coach said. “It goes both ways. Those guys got him. He’s smart, he knows where to go with the football, he commands the offense.

“Guys find homes at different places at different times in their career, and now is his time.”

Bowles joked that maybe Fitzpatrick should completely shave off his beard because of how well he played over the last three weeks by trimming it. The quarterback, however, would rather talk about his statistics than take more hair off his face.

“Nobody wants that,” he said with a smile. “I don’t want to go back to baby face. We’re going to keep it like it is.”

After all, the status quo is working pretty well for the Jets these days.